声明
摘要
Abstract
Contents
Introduction
Chapter One The Formation of Hemingway’s Ambivalence toward Nature and Women
1.1 Factors Leading to Hemingway’s Ambivalence toward Nature
1.1.1 Hemingway and the Natural World
1.1.2 The Influence of his Family and Christianity
1.1.3 The Enlightenment of Books about Nature
1.2 Influence on Hemingway’s Ambivalence toward Women
Chapter Two Hemingway’s Ambivalence toward the Natural World in the Novella
2.1 The Connection between Hemingway and Santiago
2.2 Relationship between Santiago and the Natural World
2.2.1 Santiago’s Anthropocentric Self-reafization
2.2.2 Santiago’s Integration with Nature
2.2.3 Love vs Killing:Santiago and the Sea Animals
2.3 Tragic Victory in Ecocritical sense
Chapter Three Hemingway’s Attitude toward Women in Ecofeminist Sense in the Novella
3.1 The Connection between Women and Nature
3.1.1 The Symbiosis of Women and the Caribbean Sea
3.1.2 Ignorance of Female Characters and Marginalization of Nonhuman World
3.2 Hemingway’s Ambivalence toward Women(the Sea and Marine Animals)
Conclusion
Bibliography
Acknowledgements